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TRANSCRIPT
Starting a Movement
Building Culture From The Inside-Out
Unfold The Soul Ken Williams [email protected] unfoldthesoul.com
Norms for Learning Together
• Honor start and end times. • Share openly and respect confidentiality. • Complete tasks and commit to your action plan. • Be willing to confront the brutal facts. • Be present (cell phones, texts, emails, sidebars). • Ask questions. • Focus on what we can do. • Speak the language of results. (“I think,” “I like”) • Have fun and celebrate learning!
Agenda
Foundation of PLCs: The Five Essential Elements
1. Focus on learning. 2. Develop a collaborative culture. 3. Clearly define what every student needs to learn. 4. Constantly measure our effectiveness. 5. Systematically respond when students do and don’t learn.
© Williams, Unfold the Soul 2015. solution-tree.comDo not duplicate. 1
2
Build
ing
the
Foun
datio
n: F
ive
Esse
ntia
l Ele
men
ts
(A
dapt
ed w
ith p
erm
issio
n fr
om B
uffu
m, M
atto
s, &
Web
er, P
yram
id R
espo
nse
to In
terv
entio
n:
RTI,
Prof
essio
nal L
earn
ing
Com
mun
ities
, and
How
to R
espo
nd W
hen
Kids
Don
’t Le
arn,
201
1)
G
uidi
ng Q
uest
ions
O
ur C
urre
nt R
ealit
y:
Whe
re a
re w
e no
w?
Desi
red
Real
ity:
Whe
re d
o w
e w
ant t
o be
? N
ext S
teps
: Ho
w d
o w
e ge
t the
re?
Focu
s on
Lear
ning
• Do
we
belie
ve a
ll st
uden
ts c
an
lear
n at
hig
h le
vels?
•
Will
we
take
resp
onsib
ility
to
mak
e th
is a
real
ity?
LB
D –
Ch. 2
, p. 1
9
Colla
bora
tive
Cultu
re
• Do
we
have
freq
uent
(wee
kly)
co
llabo
rativ
e tim
e em
bedd
ed
durin
g ou
r pro
fess
iona
l day
? •
Does
our
team
wor
k su
ppor
t eac
h m
embe
r’s d
aily
resp
onsib
ilitie
s?
• Ha
ve w
e id
entif
ied
team
nor
ms?
•
Do w
e ho
ld e
ach
othe
r ac
coun
tabl
e to
follo
w o
ur
norm
s?
LB
D –
Ch. 5
, p. 1
17
Clea
rly D
efin
e W
hat E
very
Stu
dent
N
eeds
to L
earn
(W
hat d
o w
e ex
pect
our
stud
ents
to
lear
n?)
• Ha
ve w
e cl
early
def
ined
the
esse
ntia
l lea
rnin
g ou
tcom
es th
at
our s
tude
nts m
ust m
aste
r for
su
cces
s in
the
next
cou
rse/
grad
e le
vel?
•
Do a
ll st
uden
ts h
ave
acce
ss to
gr
ade-
leve
l ess
entia
l sta
ndar
ds?
LB
D –
Ch. 3
, p. 5
9
Cons
tant
ly M
easu
re O
ur
Effe
ctiv
enes
s (H
ow d
o w
e kn
ow if
they
hav
e le
arne
d it?
)
• Ha
ve w
e cr
eate
d co
mm
on
asse
ssm
ents
that
mea
sure
st
uden
t mas
tery
of e
ach
esse
ntia
l sta
ndar
d?
• Do
we
com
pare
resu
lts to
id
entif
y th
e m
ost e
ffect
ive
teac
hing
stra
tegi
es?
• Do
we
use
this
info
rmat
ion
to
guid
e ou
r int
erve
ntio
ns?
LB
D –
Ch. 3
, p. 5
9
Syst
emat
ical
ly R
espo
nd W
hen
Stud
ents
Do
and
Don’
t Lea
rn
(How
will
be
resp
ond
whe
n st
uden
ts d
on’t
lear
n?)
• Do
we
have
freq
uent
tim
e,
durin
g th
e sc
hool
day
, to
rete
ach
and
enric
h st
uden
ts?
LBD
– Ch
. 4, p
. 95
© Williams, Unfold the Soul 2015. solution-tree.comReproducible.2
REPRODUCIBLE 3
Tight About What: The Right Work
1. Educators work in collaborative teams and take collective responsibility for student learning rather than working in isolation.
2. Collaborative teams implement a guaranteed and viable curriculum, unit by unit.
3. Collaborative teams monitor student learning through an ongoing
process that includes frequent, team-developed common formative assessments.
4. Educators use the results of common assessments to:
a. Improve individual practice. b. Build the team’s capacity to achieve its goals. c. Intervene and enrich on behalf of students.
5. The school provides a systematic process for interventions and
enrichment.
© Williams, Unfold the Soul 2015. solution-tree.comDo not duplicate. 3
4
Resources to Help Teams Build Shared Knowledge and Clarify “Learn What?”
• State, provincial, and national standards (i.e., NCTE, NCTM) • Vertical articulation • District or department curriculum guides • Assessment frameworks (how students will be assessed) • Data on past student performance (local, state, and national) • Examples of student work and criteria for judgment • Text presentation of curriculum • Curriculum framework of high performing schools
Criteria for Identifying Essential Common Outcomes
1. Endurance: Are students expected to retain the skills or
knowledge long after the test is completed? 2. Leverage: Is this skill or knowledge applicable to many academic
disciplines? 3. Readiness for Next Level of Learning: Is this skill or knowledge
preparing the student for success in the next grade or course?
Advantages of Team Discussion of Essential Learning
• Greater clarity regarding interpretation of standards • Greater consistency regarding importance of different standards • Greater consistency in amount of time devoted to different
standards (common pacing) • Common outcomes and common pacing as essential prerequisites
to create common assessments and team interventions • Greater ownership of and commitment to standards
© Williams, Unfold the Soul 2015. solution-tree.comDo not duplicate. 5
5
Sample Protocol for Determining the Essential Standards Every Student Must Master
Time Description of Activity Product
Prior to meeting
Each team member works independently on identifying the fivemost essential learning targets every student must master for the next quarter of school. Each member of the team is provided access to relevant data, curriculum, and resources. Teammates work on their own and bring their individual prioritized list to the next collaborative team meeting.
Each teacher will bring their prioritized list of five most essential targets.
Ten minutes
The team discusses the terms endurance, leverage, and readinessto make sure team members have a common understanding of these criteria and what they are seeking.
Ten minutes
Each member of the team shares their individual list of targets. This is a time to listen and not judge or challenge teammates’ thinking.
This process should reveal differences in priorities among team members. This underscores the need to work collaboratively on coming to consensus on the essential learning targets.
Twenty minutes
Each team member works independently to apply the three criteria to his or her list of state standards. It is important not to take too much time during this step or some teachers may overthink the process and want to mark most of the standards.
Each teacher will have highlighted approximately one-third of his or her standards, indicating the ones he or she believes meet the criteria.
Up to an hour
During this step, the team builds consensus about which standards belong on the draft list. Team members may spend time discussing what the standard means.
Teams develop a first draft of their team list of power standards.
Twenty minutes
Compare the draft of power standards to the state blueprint indicating what will likely be emphasized on the state test. The team may want to spend some additional time looking at longitu-dinal data about how students generally do on the state test.
Teams might revise the draft to reflect what they’ve learned.
Thirty minutes to one hour
Teams review how their draft list of power standards fits into the standards chosen by the grade level or course before theirs and the grade level or course taught after theirs. They look for gaps and redundancies.
Each team walks away with a final list of power standards for its team that is aligned to the state test blueprint and vertically aligned with other teams in its building or district.
Thirty minutes
Teams come to consensus on the most essential targets. They make the collective commitment to ensure mastery of these selected targets with 100 percent of the students they serve.
Teams use the urgent commitment to every student mastering the selected essential targets as their short-term SMART Goal. The selected targets drive the essential work of the collaborative team.
Varies
The team then discusses the pacing of its power standards. For some schools and districts this is done using previously developed curriculum maps or pacing guides. For others, this will take much longer if teams are starting from scratch.
Teams should have a document that lays out—at least quarterly or by trimester—which power standards are being taught during that quarter or trimester.
Source: Language for table used verbatim and adapted from “Sample Agenda for Determining Power Standards” (p. 102) from Bailey and Jakicic, Common Formative Assessment (2012). Used with permission. Visit go.solution-tree.com/assessment to download the “Sample Agenda” page.
(page 1 of 1)
6Common Formative Assessment by Bailey & Jakcic. © Solution Tree Press 2015.
solution-tree.com. Reproducible.
REPRODUCIBLE 6
What Do We Expect Students to Learn?
Grade: Subject: Trimester: Team members:
Description of Standard Learning Targets Example of Rigor Prerequisite Skills When Taught
Common Formative
Assessments
Common Summative
Assessments Extension
What is the essential standard to be learned?
Describe in student friendly “I can” statements.
Use Bloom’s taxonomy, Marzano’s taxonomy, or DOK chart to identify level of knowledge.
What prior knowledge, skills, and vocabulary are needed for a student to master this standard?
When will this standard be taught?
What measurements will be used to gauge student progress toward mastery?
What assessments will be used to measure student mastery?
What will happen when students have already learned this standard?
© W
illiams, U
nfold the Soul 2015. solution-tree.comReproducible.
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REPRO
DU
CIBLE
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R E P R O D U C I B L E74 |
Simplifying Response to Intervention © 2012 Solution Tree Press • solution-tree.com Visit go.solution-tree.com/rti to download this page.
Teaching Cycle Planning Calendar
Essential standard(s) that all students must learn:
Learning targets to be shared with students:
Use the planning calendar to schedule the following:
1. When will we start the unit of study? How will we share the learning target(s) with the students? When will each target be introduced?
2. When will our team meeting(s) during the unit of study be held? When are intervention/extension times available?
3. When are good points during the unit of study to collect evidence of student learning? How and when will we give common forma-tive assessment(s)?
4. When will we collectively analyze the common formative assess-ment data?
5. When will we reteach students who do not demonstrate mastery of the learning targets on the common formative assessment(s)?
6. When and how will we provide extension and enrichment to those who demonstrate mastery on the common formative assessment(s)?
7. When will we give the end-of-unit common assessment?
page 1 of 2
R E P R O D U C I B L E74 |
Simplifying Response to Intervention © 2012 Solution Tree Press • solution-tree.com Visit go.solution-tree.com/rti to download this page.
Teaching Cycle Planning Calendar
Essential standard(s) that all students must learn:
Learning targets to be shared with students:
Use the planning calendar to schedule the following:
1. When will we start the unit of study? How will we share the learning target(s) with the students? When will each target be introduced?
2. When will our team meeting(s) during the unit of study be held? When are intervention/extension times available?
3. When are good points during the unit of study to collect evidence of student learning? How and when will we give common forma-tive assessment(s)?
4. When will we collectively analyze the common formative assess-ment data?
5. When will we reteach students who do not demonstrate mastery of the learning targets on the common formative assessment(s)?
6. When and how will we provide extension and enrichment to those who demonstrate mastery on the common formative assessment(s)?
7. When will we give the end-of-unit common assessment?
page 1 of 2
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Simplifying Response to Intervention © 2012 Solution Tree Press • solution-tree.com Visit go.solution-tree.com/rti to download this page.
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Simplifying Response to Intervention © 2012 Solution Tree Press • solution-tree.com Visit go.solution-tree.com/rti to download this page.
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R E P R O D U C I B L E | 115
Common Formative Assessment © 2012 by Solution Tree Press • solution-tree.com Visit go.solution-tree.com/assessment to download this page.
Protocol for Data Team MeetingEach teacher brings his or her own data to the meeting. The data should be available by learning target and by student.
Step One: How many students were below proficiency, at proficiency, and above proficiency? Use this information to decide how to regroup students for a response.
Step Two: Did any teacher have significantly better results than the other teachers? If so, consider using the instructional strategy this teacher used in the planned intervention.
Step Three: Look at the students who didn’t meet proficiency. If possible, create a hypothesis about why they may not have reached expectations. Is there a deficit in prerequisite skills? Are students con-crete thinkers trying to learn an abstract concept? Do students need additional vocabulary instruction?
Step Four: Using the hypotheses about students, plan how to reteach the learning target. Decide how to group students so that those who were proficient get enrichment and those who weren’t get extra time and support.
Step Five: If you don’t have any new strategies to use to reteach the learning target, examine best-practice literature to learn new instructional strategies.
Step Six: Determine which teachers will provide intervention to which students using which strategy.
Step Seven: Plan how you will reassess students at the end of the intervention.
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REPRODUCIBLE 10
Notes
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Used with permission from Ginny Mahlke
PERSONAL AND COLLECTIVE COMMITMENTS AS A RESULT OF THIS WORKSHOP/INSERVICE
PRESENTATION I will personally commit to implementing this strategy/idea I heard today: I will measure my effectiveness by: I plan to see results from my action by this date ____________________ My accountability partner is____________________________________ I will encourage my immediate workgroup to make a collective commitment to implement this strategy/idea I heard today: As a result of our action, we expect to see the following results in student achievement:
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Four Types of Schools Answer Form
1. ___________
2. ___________
3. ___________
4. ___________
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